Fungal and Parasitic Infections

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Fungal Arthritis: Overview - Not-So-Fun Guys

  • Rare, indolent, monoarticular; diagnosis often delayed.
  • Common Pathogens:
    • Candida albicans (most common; post-op, IVDU, disseminated)
    • Aspergillus spp. (immunocompromised)
    • Dimorphic: Blastomyces, Coccidioides, Sporothrix (rose gardener's)
  • Key Risk Factors:
    • Immunosuppression (HIV, steroids, DM, TNF-α inhibitors)
    • Prosthetic joints, IV drug use
    • Direct inoculation: injections, trauma, surgery
  • Clinical: Chronic pain, swelling, warmth, ↓ROM; minimal systemic signs.
  • Diagnosis: Synovial fluid (↑WBC, culture, stains: PAS, GMS); Biopsy (histology & culture gold standard).
  • Management: Systemic antifungals (Ampho B, azoles) + surgical debridement. Microscopy of fungal elements

Candida is the most common fungal arthritis, often linked to disseminated candidiasis or iatrogenic inoculation (e.g., injections).

Fungal Arthritis: Dx & Rx - Diagnosis & Duel

  • Diagnosis (Dx):
    • Presentation: Insidious onset, chronic, often monoarticular (knee common). Risk: Immunocompromised, IVDU, trauma, prior surgery/injection.
    • Synovial Fluid:
      • WBC: 10,000-40,000/µL (mononuclear predominance).
      • Glucose: ↓.
      • Culture: Gold standard (Sabouraud agar). Prolonged incubation (2-4 weeks).
      • Stains: KOH prep, Gram (Candida), Giemsa, PAS, GMS.
    • Synovial Biopsy: Higher diagnostic yield for histology (granulomas, fungal elements) & culture.
    • Imaging: X-ray (late: juxta-articular osteopenia, erosions, joint space narrowing). MRI (early: synovitis, effusions).
    • Adjuncts: Serum (1,3)-β-D-glucan. Galactomannan (Aspergillus).
  • Treatment (Rx) - "Duel": Prolonged Antifungals + Surgical Debridement.
    • Candida spp.: Fluconazole or Echinocandin (e.g., Caspofungin). Amphotericin B (lipid) for severe/resistant.
    • Aspergillus spp.: Voriconazole (DOC).
    • Sporothrix schenckii: Itraconazole (DOC for osteoarticular).
    • Duration: Typically 6-12 months, often longer.

Candida albicans is the most common fungal pathogen causing arthritis, frequently resulting from hematogenous dissemination or direct inoculation.

Parasitic Arthritis: Overview - Unwelcome Guests

  • Pathogenesis: Joint inflammation triggered by:
    • Direct parasitic invasion (e.g., Dracunculus medinensis).
    • Immune-mediated reactions (e.g., immune complex deposition, hypersensitivity).
    • Larval migration effects.
  • Common Causative Agents:
    • Helminths: Echinococcus granulosus (hydatid disease), Schistosoma spp., Filarial worms (Wuchereria, Brugia), Strongyloides stercoralis, Toxocara spp.
    • Protozoa (less common): Giardia lamblia (reactive arthritis).
  • Clinical Pointers:
    • Typically monoarticular, but can be oligo- or polyarticular.
    • Migratory arthralgia, chronic synovitis possible.
    • Peripheral eosinophilia is a significant indicator.
  • Diagnostic Approach:
    • Synovial fluid analysis: Look for eosinophils, rarely larvae/ova.
    • Serology for specific parasites.
    • Imaging (X-ray, USG, CT/MRI): May show cysts, calcifications.
    • Biopsy (synovial/muscle) if diagnosis is elusive.

⭐ Osseous hydatid disease (Echinococcus granulosus) can present as bone cysts that erode into adjacent joints, mimicking primary arthritis or osteomyelitis.

Parasitic Arthritis: Dx & Rx - Detection & Defense

  • Etiology & Clues (Detection):
    • Protozoa: E. histolytica, Giardia (reactive).
    • Helminths:
      • Nematodes: Dracunculus (direct, calcified), Strongyloides, Filarial (reactive, migratory).
      • Cestodes: Echinococcus (hydatid, direct).
      • Trematodes: Schistosomiasis (reactive).
    • Clues: Mono/polyarthritis, travel Hx, eosinophilia, primary infection signs.
  • Diagnosis (Dx):
    • Synovial fluid: Inflammatory, ↑eosinophils (key!), parasite microscopy (rare).
    • Serology; Stool/Urine exam (ova, cysts).
    • Imaging: X-ray (calcified worms, lytic lesions), USG/MRI.
    • Biopsy: If diagnosis elusive.
  • Treatment (Rx - Defense):
    • Targeted antiparasitics: Metronidazole, Albendazole, Praziquantel, Ivermectin.
    • Symptomatic: NSAIDs; Corticosteroids (cautious use).
    • Surgical: Hydatid cyst/Guinea worm removal.

Calcified Guinea worm near knee joint on X-ray and CT

⭐ Peripheral eosinophilia is a significant clue for helminthic arthritis; synovial fluid eosinophilia, though less common, is more specific.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Fungal arthritis: Often indolent, monoarticular; Candida most common, especially in immunocompromised or with prosthetics.
  • Fungal osteomyelitis: Frequently affects vertebrae; Aspergillus common in immunocompromised individuals.
  • Sporothrix schenckii: "Rose gardener's disease", characterized by lymphocutaneous spread to joints.
  • Madura foot (Mycetoma): Chronic infection with sinus tracts discharging colored grains (sulfur granules).
  • Parasitic bone disease: Rare; includes Echinococcus (hydatid cysts in bone) and Cysticercosis (intramuscular cysts).
  • Diagnosis: Relies on biopsy and culture (e.g., Sabouraud agar for fungi) for definitive identification.
  • Treatment: Involves prolonged specific antimicrobial therapy (antifungals/antiparasitics) and often surgical debridement.

Practice Questions: Fungal and Parasitic Infections

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Which test is most specific for diagnosing invasive aspergillosis?

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Flashcards: Fungal and Parasitic Infections

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Terminal stage of osteonecrosis/osteochondritis is also known as _____

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Terminal stage of osteonecrosis/osteochondritis is also known as _____

osteochondritis dessicans

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